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Prayut not qualified to helm Asean [Editorial]


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Prayut not qualified to helm Asean

By The Nation

 

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Parties must offer a strong vision for regional leadership as Thailand heads into year of reckoning

 

As Thailand prepares take the helm of Asean for 2019, you would expect political parties to be promoting their platforms for regional leadership ahead of the upcoming election.

 

Surprisingly, no party has offered clear policies on how to steer the half-century-old regional grouping – which was born in Thailand – forward. All of them recognise that Asean sits at the core of Thai foreign policy, and all want Thailand to play a significant role in international affairs. But how?

 

Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha, who appears desperate to retain power post-election, is deemed the weakest factor for Thailand’s foreign affairs’ ambitions. As an unelected head of state, his standing is already low in the eyes of the diplomatic community and international media.

 

Prayut’s performance chairing several international forums, including for the Group of 77 and the Ayeyawady-Chao Phraya-Mekong Economic Cooperation Strategy, hasn’t helped his cause. Rather than using summit press conferences to offer incisive ideas on Thailand’s role in foreign affairs, Prayut has wasted valuable time in the global spotlight ridiculing political opponents, media representatives and critics.

 

The PM has shown little interest or vision in international affairs, an oversight also exhibited by the political party that now supports him. Instead, that party, which is almost certain to nominate Prayut as a candidate for prime minister, has focused on spending the national budget in a campaign tantamount to buying votes in advance. It is exploiting the very populist policy it claimed to disdain in order to secure political support.

 

Prayut’s government has indeed made preparations for taking the Asean chairmanship next year, but these are simply routine. The same bureaucratic groundwork could be laid with or without a government in place. The theme of the Thai chairmanship – “Advancing Partnership for Sustainability” – sounds both grand and empty. 

 

Prayut’s words on being handed the Asean baton in Singapore last month were equally banal. Showing no special insight on global affairs, he spent most of his speech explaining the meaning of the Thai symbol for Asean chairmanship. The Phuang Malai, or flower garland, is commonly used in Thailand to welcome and honour our guests, he said.

 

His statements since have mostly been on the same theme, telling Thai citizens to be good hosts to their Asean guests. If he did manage to retain the government top job, Thais should not humiliate him with protests, he said.

 

In fact, Asean badly needs to reassert its relevance amid an era of growing geo-political turbulence. A raft of tough pending issues demand strong leadership. The Rakhine crisis, a code of conduct for the South China Sea, and negotiation for the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) are all at a critical stage, requiring Asean to take action for the benefit of the whole region.

 

International and Asean affairs have never been a focus of political campaigning in Thailand, but that should  change as we prepare to take the regional helm.

 

 Granted, policies on Asean have never generated many votes for the parties, but things could be different if millions of Thai voters were given the knowledge of what’s at stake.

 

It is crucial that Thai voters and the wider international community are shown a vision for Asean by the parties that are now seeking to lead it and Thailand.

 

Prayut has given ample proof that he is not up to that job. It’s time for other parties to step up to the plate.

 

Source: http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/opinion/30361133

 
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-- © Copyright The Nation 2018-12-26
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1 minute ago, YetAnother said:

the heart of the matter; and why would an arbitrary thai military general have Any skill in international affairs ?

Skill set: 

Hmm has he;

Traveled many scenic countries?

Or met a myriad of interesting people's of other kinds? 

Or dropped bombs on them? 

Nah! And no more likelylikely to be a leader of peace than Rambuka  ... 

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1 hour ago, neeray said:

 

Prayut must be aware of the above noted concerns. If he was truly concerned about the good of the country and its people, he would consider his job of bringing peace to the country done and bow out now while he's "on top".

And please scrap the 20 year plan on your way out the door !

If you don't agree with a "20 year plan" , what do you suggest?? To be planning major infrastructure requires a long term plan, not some "hit or miss" plan + needs to be bi-partisan, that would be a major obstacle for most countries....

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Most, domestic and overseas can clearly see that he, the dictator, is not the right man for the job. 

 

World leaders amaze me with their pathetic security excuses,  relentless power crazed ambitions topped with world domination.

 

The few individuals within Governments Banks and Religion, should serve the people, not the people serve them.

 

Humans can't get on with making life plus our home, the world, a better place for all to live, enjoy and prosper in.

 

SAD!

 

 

 

 

 

 

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2 hours ago, eggers said:

If you don't agree with a "20 year plan" , what do you suggest?? To be planning major infrastructure requires a long term plan, not some "hit or miss" plan + needs to be bi-partisan, that would be a major obstacle for most countries....

He is only locking up all the finds to keep his little junta going. He plan to do exactly what Thaskin was doing, i.e., turn Thailand into a Singapore. I don't like either person. 

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  "Granted, policies on Asean have never generated many votes for the parties, but things could be different if millions of Thai voters were given the knowledge of what’s at stake"........Therein lies the problem. Thai voters are kept in the dark regarding that which may advance their knowledge and understandings of possibilities outside their own country. From day one they have it drummed into them that the world revolves around Thailand. And God forbid they question their supposed betters. 

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Well without worrying about some Computer Crime claim against me since I no longer reside in Thailand.

 

Prayuth is nothing more than a tinpot General, akin to hosts of South American Generalissimo's who have come and gone, with little more than footnote in history.

 

If he's lucky Thai's won't wake up and, unlike their South American brethren, finally hold leaders of military coups criminally liable for their actions.

 

It's funny how when South American's woke up to that latter fact, and the Generals ended up in prison, sorta stopped military coups in their tracks!

 

I like to hope that maybe, just maybe this is time that Thai's have the same epiphany and Prayuth doesn't find himself as PM, but residing inside some Hell Hole Thai prison for the rest of his life.

 

That would be the 'good' result from the latest coup.

 

However I wait with bated, if unexpected, breath!

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6 hours ago, webfact said:

In fact, Asean badly needs to reassert its relevance

So, even the very relevance of Asean is questionable, according to the OP.

While Thailand's primary concern, rather, is peace, cohesion, and stability. It had seen years of mayhem before Prayut, and who knows how long will it take before it slides back into the same sort of troubles once "democracy" prevails...

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33 minutes ago, MaksimMislavsky said:

So, even the very relevance of Asean is questionable, according to the OP.

While Thailand's primary concern, rather, is peace, cohesion, and stability. It had seen years of mayhem before Prayut, and who knows how long will it take before it slides back into the same sort of troubles once "democracy" prevails...

You meant those troubles that were manufactured by the elites and the military. Leave democracy alone to sort out the troubles. Thailand don’t need a nanny especially from the military. 

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8 minutes ago, Eric Loh said:

Leave democracy alone to sort out the troubles. Thailand don’t need a nanny especially from the military. 

Probably possible in few exotic countries like Iceland. We could all witness how it worked in Thailand before 2014.

 

 

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16 minutes ago, Odysseus123 said:

Jest lurve a good Authoritarian...always banging on about "cohesion and stability"

 

Very popular concepts in the 1920's and 30's too..

 

Boot polish by any other name is still boot polish.

Would be a valid point if there were an effective, prosperous democracy ruthlessly devoured by an authoritarian usurper. Such things had happened in history, indeed, but I'm not sure if it is the case with Thailand.

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